(ACNS) The
Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, has
responded to the final declaration of the Global
Anglican Future Conference with the following
statement:
The Final Statement from the GAFCON meeting in
Jordan and Jerusalem contains much that is
positive and encouraging about the priorities of
those who met for prayer and pilgrimage in the
last week. The ‘tenets of orthodoxy’ spelled out
in the document will be acceptable to and shared
by the vast majority of Anglicans in every
province, even if there may be differences of
emphasis and perspective on some issues. I agree
that the Communion needs to be united in its
commitments on these matters, and I have no
doubt that the Lambeth Conference will wish to
affirm all these positive aspects of GAFCON’s
deliberations. Despite the claims of some, the
conviction of the uniqueness of Jesus Christ as
Lord and God and the absolute imperative of
evangelism are not in dispute in the common life
of the Communion
However, GAFCON’s proposals for the way ahead
are problematic in all sorts of ways, and I urge
those who have outlined these to think very
carefully about the risks entailed.
A ‘Primates’ Council’ which consists only of a
self-selected group from among the Primates of
the Communion will not pass the test of
legitimacy for all in the Communion. And any
claim to be free to operate across provincial
boundaries is fraught with difficulties, both
theological and practical – theological because
of our historic commitments to mutual
recognition of ministries in the Communion,
practical because of the obvious strain of
responsibly exercising episcopal or primatial
authority across enormous geographical and
cultural divides.
Two questions
arise at once about what has been proposed. By
what authority are Primates deemed acceptable or
unacceptable members of any new primatial
council? And how is effective discipline to be
maintained in a situation of overlapping and
competing jurisdictions?
No-one should for a moment impute selfish or
malicious motives to those who have offered
pastoral oversight to congregations in other
provinces; these actions, however we judge them,
arise from pastoral and spiritual concern. But
one question has repeatedly been raised which is
now becoming very serious: how is a bishop or
primate in another continent able to
discriminate effectively between a genuine
crisis of pastoral relationship and theological
integrity, and a situation where there are
underlying non-theological motivations at work?
We have seen instances of intervention in
dioceses whose leadership is unquestionably
orthodox simply because of local difficulties of
a personal and administrative nature. We have
also seen instances of clergy disciplined for
scandalous behaviour in one jurisdiction
accepted in another, apparently without due
process. Some other Christian churches have
unhappy experience of this problem and it needs
to be addressed honestly.
It is not enough to dismiss the existing
structures of the Communion. If they are not
working effectively, the challenge is to renew
them rather than to improvise solutions that may
seem to be effective for some in the short term
but will continue to create more problems than
they solve. This challenge is one of the most
significant focuses for the forthcoming Lambeth
Conference. One of its major stated aims is to
restore and deepen confidence in our Anglican
identity. And this task will require all who
care as deeply as the authors of the statement
say they do about the future of Anglicanism to
play their part.
The language of ‘colonialism’ has been freely
used of existing patterns. No-one is likely to
look back with complacency to the colonial
legacy. But emerging from the legacy of
colonialism must mean a new co-operation of
equals, not a simple reversal of power. If those
who speak for GAFCON are willing to share in a
genuine renewal of all our patterns of
reflection and decision-making in the Communion,
they are welcome, especially in the shaping of
an effective Covenant for our future together.
I believe that it is wrong to assume we are now
so far apart that all those outside the GAFCON
network are simply proclaiming another gospel.
This is not the case; it is not the experience
of millions of faithful and biblically focused
Anglicans in every province. What is true is
that, on all sides of our controversies,
slogans, misrepresentations and caricatures
abound. And they need to be challenged in the
name of the respect and patience we owe to each
other in Jesus Christ.
I have in the past quoted to some in the
Communion who would call themselves radical the
words of the Apostle in I Cor.11.33: ‘wait for
one another’. I would say the same to those in
whose name this statement has been issued. An
impatience at all costs to clear the Lord’s
field of the weeds that may appear among the
shoots of true life (Matt.13.29) will put at
risk our clarity and effectiveness in
communicating just those evangelical and
catholic truths which the GAFCON statement
presents.